BOLD is thrilled to host a reading with Jennie Bricker, author of Thirsty Creek, and Cindy Brown, author of Echoes of the Lost.
Thirsty Creek, an ecological murder mystery set in the Wallowa Mountains. The bright red fish are gone from a sportsfishing destination lake in Oregon’s Wallowa Mountains, and the Nez Perce Tribe and the government want to know why. Science consultant Jess MacKinnon tears into the mountains on her motorcycle to solve the mystery. She takes the place of a government biologist, Ben Fletcher, who drowned in that very same lake. Jess knew Ben, and not just professionally—but that’s a secret. Jennie Bricker talks about her debut novel and the real-world ecological catastrophes it’s based on.
Echoes of the Lost
One retired detective. One frightened boy. One daring librarian. The case that will unravel everything. A tense, emotional mystery perfect for fans of Michael Connelly and Liz Moore. He usually had something to go on: a body, a name, a weapon . . . What did he have now? Retired detective Ster McCaffrey has lived in isolation since the death of his beloved wife. Recently disabled from a traumatic brain injury, his quiet life is interrupted when he wakes in the dead of night to find a child sobbing on his doorstep–leaving him with more questions than answers. After learning that the boy and his missing mother are unhoused with no official investigation underway, Ster decides to solve the mystery himself. To do so, he’ll need to interview a community whose voice is rarely heard: the houseless of Portland, Oregon. Diving deeper into their tight-knit circle, Ster realizes trust is hard-won, and answers even more so. The further he goes, the more difficult it is to tell where the case ends, and his past begins. With threats to his home, new evidence found in the river, and signs pointing to murder–friends and enemies are closer than Ster realizes. Only one thing is clear: the boy is in grave danger.